“Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.” - Hanlon’s Razor
I assume you’re operating off this principle, and I understand the point, but it’s ill conceived for our purposes. Where malice and stupidity are functionally identical, preparing for malice is equivalent to preparing for stupidity. Where malice and stupidity differ, malice is more dangerous and requires greater preparation. Hanlon’s Razor is a good perspective to prevent escalation in cycles of revenge, but it’s bad perspective for strategy.
It’s safe to assume some portion of highly educated and entrenched powers are willing to undermine the public good for their own gain. We shouldn’t allow our selves or our peers to dismiss potential adversaries as stupid. Even if the leadership was composed entirely of nepo-nitwits, there are competent people working for them, advising them, and benefiting from their success.
“Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.” - Hanlon’s Razor
I assume you’re operating off this principle, and I understand the point, but it’s ill conceived for our purposes. Where malice and stupidity are functionally identical, preparing for malice is equivalent to preparing for stupidity. Where malice and stupidity differ, malice is more dangerous and requires greater preparation. Hanlon’s Razor is a good perspective to prevent escalation in cycles of revenge, but it’s bad perspective for strategy.
It’s safe to assume some portion of highly educated and entrenched powers are willing to undermine the public good for their own gain. We shouldn’t allow our selves or our peers to dismiss potential adversaries as stupid. Even if the leadership was composed entirely of nepo-nitwits, there are competent people working for them, advising them, and benefiting from their success.
I want this response to be higher. This is an excellent take.